I moved one years ago from classic OO languages such like Java to JavaScript. The following code is definitely not recommended (or even not correct) in Java:
if(dayNumber = getClickedDayNumber(dayInfo))
{
alert("day number found : " + dayNumber);
}
function getClickedDayNumber(dayInfo)
{
dayNumber = dayInfo.indexOf("fc-day");
if(dayNumber != -1) //substring found
{
//normally any calendar month consists of "40" days, so this will definitely pick up its day number.
return parseInt(dayInfo.substring(dayNumber+6, dayNumber+8));
}
return false;
}
Basically I just found out that I can assign a variable to a value in an if condition statement, and immediately check the assigned value as if it is boolean.
For a safer bet, I usually separate that into two lines of code, assign first then check the variable, but now that I found this, I am just wondering whether is it good practice or not in the eyes of experienced JavaScript developers?
"The following code is definitely not recommended (or event not correct) in Java..."
Is it even correct in JavaScript? Because, as far as I can see, you return an integer (return parseInt(...)
) ifdayNumber != -1
is true, but a boolean if it is false.